Mary Shelley, Promethean Character, and the Authority of Science

Q4 Social Sciences
Ryan R. Holston
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract This essay argues that Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein demonstrates an incipient awareness of the disconnect between the positivist view of human knowledge, which claims to provide a god’s-eye-view of a “reality” consisting solely of observable facts, and the sense that for human beings, genuine knowledge of reality must be identified with truths learned from within a concrete, historical life and the experiences of an embedded subject. Shelley thus anticipates more recent critics of scientism, such as Hans-Georg Gadamer and Eric Voegelin, who contend that despite science’s claims to ultimate explanatory power, there is something decidedly unreal about its account of human life as it is lived concretely over time. Echoing an ancient understanding of knowledge, such critics have questioned the “external” view of reality that is central to positivist epistemology. Similarly, Shelley’s novel suggests that she conceives of the real not as a realm of objectively observable and verifiable facts, but as a way of being and acting within the world—specifically, she sees it as a particular orientation of character that is habitually prepared to place restraints on the individual will.
玛丽·雪莱:普罗米修斯式的性格与科学的权威
摘要本文认为,玛丽·雪莱的《弗兰肯斯坦》展示了对人类知识的实证主义观点与对人类来说,真正的现实知识必须与从具体、,历史生活和嵌入主体的经历。因此,雪莱预见到了最近的科学主义批评者,如汉斯·格奥尔格·伽达默尔和埃里克·沃格林,他们认为,尽管科学声称拥有最终的解释力,但它对人类生活的描述显然是不真实的,因为它是随时间具体生活的。与古代对知识的理解相呼应,这些评论家对实证主义认识论的核心“外部”现实观提出了质疑。同样,雪莱的小说表明,她认为真实不是一个客观可观察和可验证的事实的领域,而是一种在世界中存在和行动的方式——特别是,她认为这是一种习惯性地准备约束个人意志的特定性格取向。
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来源期刊
Perspectives on Political Science
Perspectives on Political Science Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Whether discussing Montaigne"s case for tolerance or Nietzsche"s political critique of modern science, Perspectives on Political Science links contemporary politics and culture to the enduring questions posed by great thinkers from antiquity to the present. Ideas are the lifeblood of the journal, which comprises articles, symposia, and book reviews. Recent articles address the writings of Aristotle, Adam Smith, and Plutarch; the movies No Country for Old Men and 3:10 to Yuma; and the role of humility in modern political thought.
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